Triplets Sold a Painting That Exposed a Mafia Billionaire’s Buried Past-congtien

“Can You Buy This Painting?” Billionaire Mafia Froze Because He Thought the Woman in the Painting Was Dead—Until Three Starving Triplets Asked Him to Save Their Mother

Dante Russo had learned early that Boston had two maps.

There was the one tourists carried through Beacon Hill and Back Bay, pointing at cobblestones, brownstones, churches, and restaurants with candlelit windows.

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Then there was the map men like Dante carried in their heads.

That one had no landmarks printed on paper.

It had restaurants where deals were made, alleys where warnings were delivered, offices where judges’ clerks drank too much, and family names that could open doors or close coffins.

By forty-two, Dante owned buildings in both versions of the city.

He owned three hotels, two shipping warehouses, a private security firm, enough restaurants that journalists politely called him an investor, and enough fear that the same journalists stopped asking how a boy from East Boston had become a billionaire before middle age.

People called him many things.

Chairman.

Benefactor.

Criminal.

Boss.

Only one person had ever called him Dante like the name belonged to a man instead of a warning.

Elena Ward.

She had been twenty-eight when she first walked into his life with a camera bag over one shoulder and paint under her thumbnail.

She was not impressed by the car, the watch, the men outside his office, or the way restaurant owners came personally to his table.

That annoyed him before it saved him.

Elena painted portraits for people who usually could not afford portraits.

Nurses after double shifts.

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